Yellowstone River in the winter |
Clear and flowing rivers |
Despite the bison and winter condition, the park remained very accessible. I was able to hike around Old Faithful and the Upper Geyser Basin as well as the several other geyser basins of Yellowstone. The Grand Canyon of the Yellowstone was simply majestic and I was never far from the abundant wildlife of the park.
Unique color, unique formations, unique wildlife |
Part of what makes Yellowstone so special is that the park administration, local businesses, nearby communities and conservationists all maintain a very unique balance between allowing people to enjoy the park and preserving it for future generations. This is a very rare and, I imagine, difficult harmony to keep. After all, 3.3 million people come to visit this park in a year! Everyone from the carefree day-hiking family to the intense week-long wilderness backpackers wants to walk through the park. From fathers who teach their children to fish to commercial fly fishing trips, Yellowstone accommodates!
Overall, I found Yellowstone to be accessible, relatively cheap and I could easily obtain permits for fishing and backpacking. Not only that, but the price of admission and the price for permits seemed fair and reasonable. I felt like I was supporting the efforts of the park administration to sustainable manage this vast wilderness.
So I just roamed! I took off over the many boardwalks through the geyser basins. I hiked through the vast woods and wilderness of the Rocky Mountains. I saw the majestic alpine lakes and clear flowing streams. I watched the great herds of bison and elk and saw traces of grizzly bears who have long disappeared from lower latitudes. I was as free and unhindered as the fish wildlife which also inhabit this special place.
This is what makes Yellowstone and other National Parks such a vital part of our heritage. They give us freedom to pursue all levels and facets of the outdoors while making sure that these areas stay as rugged and beautiful as they were before they were parks. Part of the preservation aspect is controlling and removing invasive plant and animal species. This is partly the responsibility of hard-working ecologists but also the responsibility of the visitor.
Hikers, fishers, backpackers and boaters all need to be educated on the several methods of "Leave No Trace" to avoid introducing or spreading invasive species. So while many anglers are happy to fish out the nonnative Rainbow Trout, anglers must also observe catch and release for native fish as well as practicing "Leave No Trace" fishing ethics. While many boaters are eager to hit the water, it takes special cleaning and inspection of the boat to make sure it is not carrying non-native species into a delicate ecosystem. Even boots can spread non-native flora!
Even geysers and other natural features can be permanently ruined without "Leave no Trace" ethics |
1 Comment
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September 5, 2012 @ 07:10
thanks for sharing.